Suicide Prevention in Clinical Practice: How to Prepare
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Presented in collaboration with ADAA's Suicide and Self-Injury Special Interest Group Mental health clinicians play a pivotal role in suicide prevention. Setting up your practice to assist a person who may be thinking about suicide or has made a suicide attempt is key for optimizing care.

9/25/2025
When: Thursday, September 25, 2025
1:00 PM
Where: https://adaa.org/webinar/professional/suicide-prevention-clinical-practice-how-prepare
United States
Contact: webinars@adaa.org

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This presentation will offer a model for understanding suicide and cover topics such as how to have a conversation about suicidal thoughts and behaviors, potential contributors to suicide and frequent warning signs of a period of increased suicide risk. Resources and important steps to take will be reviewed and assessment and intervention options will be considered. Preparation offers a sense of confidence and capacity to help someone prevent or manage in a crisis moment.

Learning Objectives

  • Describe a model for understanding suicide that can frame clinical practice.
  • Discuss how to have a conversation about suicidal thoughts with a patient in order to develop a plan for next steps.
  • List three things that a clinician can do to prepare their practice for suicide prevention.
Presenter(s) Biography

Jill Harkavy-Friedman, PhD

Jill Harkavy-Friedman, PhD
 

Jill Harkavy-Friedman, PhD is the Senior Vice President of Research and leads the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention’s research program to advance the field of suicide prevention. AFSP's research program provides funding to research grants, offers workshops and training to researchers, and disseminates research findings to increase public awareness and support advocacy in mental health and suicide prevention. With over 35 years of experience as a clinician and a suicide prevention researcher, she is passionate about translating research into practice, publishing over 100 peer-reviewed articles and training clinicians around the nation. She assists with AFSP’s development of programs and messages that reflect best practices and current research. She works with other national and international research organizations to help set the suicide prevention research agenda and encourage innovative research.

Dr. Harkavy-Friedman earned her B.A. in Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania and her PhD. in Clinical Psychology at the University of Florida. She completed her internship at Yale-New Haven Hospital. In 1984, she joined Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine, establishing the Adolescent Depression and Suicide Program. In 1989, she moved to Columbia University/New York State Psychiatric Institute where she is an associate professor in the department of psychiatry.  She joined the staff AFSP in 2011. She maintains a clinical practice in Manhattan.